How to be a Writer in your 30s in Lagos: Self-help literature and the creation of authority in Africa

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

This chapter explores the ways that literary scholars might take self-help texts seriously, through a focus on Lape Soetan�s self-help e-books alongside self-help literature from across the African continent. While the contemporary boom in self-help literature may invite a reading of the genre as �new�, it in fact has long literary roots in the African continent. Lape Soetan�s focus on gender, love and relationships aligns her with a time-honoured tradition in African self-help literature. While business and prosperity texts are ever-popular amongst African readers, books concerned with marriage, relationships and sex are also published and consumed widely across Africa. In offering solutions to the problems of everyday life, self-help texts often encourage their readers to make progress in life. This emphasis on personal progress leads Newell to suggest that many West African self-help texts adopt a similar approach to American self-help literature, which helps the reader to imagine �a future where a successful, self-created self exists in a happier state�.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationRoutledge Handbook of African Literature
PublisherRoutledge
Pages139-153
Number of pages15
ISBN (Electronic)9781315229546
ISBN (Print)9781138713864
Publication statusPublished - 21 Mar 2019

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